History, asked by pragyakamalsingh, 8 months ago

How did Hitler destroy democracy in Germany?​

Answers

Answered by silent9
21

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Hitler in his autobiography show his greif for the weimer republic. He actually did hated the democracy since he believed in dictatorship. The great March which Mussolini lead to the Rome ultimately made him the 40th prime minister of Italy. Inspiring by the same event Hitler too had a March to the government office. But he was captured and put in jail. Where he wrote his book mein kampf. Then he realized that he won't have a date which Mussolini I had so decided to gain power though democracy. In 1933 election that Nazi party won the votes by big margin and that is when broke into tears in the council. In 1934 after he gained total control of the whole germany. And the opposition parties where banned and shut down. He then shut down all the newspaper who wrote bad about him. And the press was also forced to admire Hitler and this is how he crushed democracy.

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Answered by rohitsingh1801
5

Explanation:

Adolf Hitler was born in Austria in 1889 and, as a teen, lived a poor life in Vienna. He served as a lance corporal for the Bavarian military during the first World War, and received two Iron Crosses for bravery. After the war Hitler breathed life into the German Worker's Party, renamed it the National Socialist German Worker's Party, and in 1920 released the 25-Point program, a list of Party demands. In 1923 Hitler and the Nazi Party attempted to take over the Bavarian government by force. Hitler was arrested and imprisoned; he served only nine months of a five-year sentence and spent his free time writing Mein Kampf, his manifesto/autobiography. In 1932 the National Socialist German Worker's Party (the German abbreviation being NSDAP or Nazi) won 30 percent of the popular vote in the presidential election. (Grobman 28) Hitler made a deal with the victor, Paul von Hindenburg, and became Chancellor of Germany in January 1933. When Hindenburg died in 1934, Hitler consolidated his power, becoming both President and Chancellor. After becoming comfortable at the helm, Hitler began implementing his dictatorial policies, some of which involved the elimination of trade unions, severe limitations on freedom of expression, and radical racist policies, particularly against the Jews. Hitler called for the invasion of Poland in 1939, an event which sparked World War II. The German army made impressive gains in the early 1940s, but by 1944 Hitler realized that Germany was no match for the United States and its Allies. He committed suicide with his wife in the spring of 1945. (Grobman 32)

An accurate understanding of Hitler's views of democracy is possible when democracy itself is defined in its broadest terms. A political order is a democracy when there exists elected officials, free and fair elections, inclusive suffrage, the right to run for public office, freedom of expression, the right to alternative information and associational autonomy (the right to form interest groups). (Dahl 221-222) Likewise, a political order devoid of one or more of these facets is not a democracy. Popular sovereignty (or lack thereof) is the most vital characteristic in regards to democracies and other political orders, as it is what fundamentally sets democracy apart from other political orders.

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